The American Moors: Why Black History is So Often Fake History

Executive Summary

  • American blacks created the Moorish Empire to increase their self-esteem and create special rights and privileges that any government did not recognize.

Introduction

American Moors are a group of scam artists who follow the American Moors church, which proposes a false history where African blacks were part of the 7th and 8th-century caliphate and that this caliphate conquered all of Northern, Central, and South America without the knowledge of any of the people that lived there — and that those who identify as Moors own the entirety of these continents, which gives them special privileges.

Video on the American Moors

The American Moors claim that the American Indians stole their land from them.

What American Moors Think

This is from the article Moorish Sovereign Citizens.

Moorish sovereigns espouse an interpretation of sovereign doctrine that African Americans constitute an elite class within American society with special rights and privileges that convey to them a sovereign immunity, placing them beyond federal and state authority.

“Everything that will be stated is based on De Jure Law (Common Law, Constitutional Law, Indigenous Rights, Human Rights) and NOT (“just”) admiralty / maritime (De Facto Legalities, such as statutes, codes, rules, regulations, ordinances, policies and etc… ANY colorable law (color of law) that contradicts the Constitution for the united States of America is NULL and VOID and has NO withstanding.” – Dr. Alim El Bey

The American Moors use a lot of pseudo-legal and pseudo-intellectual babble to try to support their claims. It is very common for American Moors to use words they do not know the meaning of, which they get from the American Moor church.

The Moors trace their roots to the creation of the MSTA in 1913 and its founder, Noble Drew Ali (aka Timothy Drew). Some Moorish sovereigns are known to affiliate with the MSTA, but not all MSTA chapters are linked to sovereign citizens. In fact, the MSTA issued a statement in July 2011 condemning sovereign citizen practices and denying any association with radical or subversive Moorish sovereign groups.

“Empress of the Washitaw Nation,” asserts that Moors were among the earliest settlers to the U.S. and the rightful owners of all lands ceded to the United States in the Louisiana Purchase.

This is My Comment on YouTube

Its terrible that the American Indians stole their lands from the Moors. This means that all the Indian reservations need to be handed over to the Moors. This is a WOKE checkmate, because if you dispute that the Moorish empire in all of the Americas predated all American Indians, then you are an anti-black racist.

Other Comments from YouTube

Not only are these people not connected to Moors in any way, but Moors was never an identity anyone ever called themselves in the past. Moors was an exonym used by the Spanish about various Berber and Arab peoples that conquered the Iberian Peninsula in the 7th-8th centuries. The Spanish simply categorized them all as the same group, as it often happens with foreigners. They themselves never called themselves Moors since they were never a single ethnic or cultural group at all. This must be the first group of people to call themselves Moors and they’re not even descended from the Arabs or North Africans, most enslaved people in the Atlantic Slave trade came from sub-Saharan Africa.

More on the American Moors

Moorish sovereign citizens

Moorish sovereign citizens, who consider that black people constitute an elite class within American society, are in the paradoxical situation of using an ideology which originated in a white supremacist environment.

n addition to the Moorish Science Temple doctrine that Black Americans are of Moorish descent, Moorish sovereign citizens claim immunity from U.S. federal, state, and local laws, because of a mistaken belief that the Moroccan–American Treaty of Friendship (1786) grants them sovereignty.In reality, the 1786 treaty was primarily a trade agreement.

Some also believe that Black Americans are indigenous to the United States. The Moorish sovereign citizen movement has also expanded to include a few whites.

Tactics used by the group include filing false deeds and property claims, false liens against government officials, frivolous legal motions to overwhelm courts, and invented legalese used in court appearances and filings. Various groups and individuals identifying as Moorish sovereign citizens have used the unorthodox “quantum grammar” created by David Wynn Miller.

Some “Moorish” activists have practiced hostile possession of properties, citing “reparations” as a justification for their actions, even though their victims included other Black Americans. In June 2021, Hubert A. John, a self-identified citizen of the Al Moroccan Empire, was arrested and charged with counts of criminal mischief, burglary, criminal trespass and terroristic threats after he occupied a house in Newark, New Jersey, claiming that it fell into the jurisdiction of the Al Moroccan Empire.

Other examples of Moorish sovereign citizen groups include the Free Moorish Nation, the United Mawshah Nation of Nuurs, the Nuwaubian Nation of Moors and the Al Moroccan Empire. These groups primarily operated throughout the Southeastern, Northeastern and Midwestern United States.

For some, who identify themselves as “Moor,” “Moorish” or something similar, there is a belief that a 1787 treaty between the United States and Morocco grants them immunity from U.S. law. Others, such as the Washitaw Nation, may falsely claim to occupy United Nations Indigenous People’s Seat 215 – there is no such thing – and create their own birth certificates, passports, driver’s licenses and vehicle registrations.

Moorish sovereigns believe their status as members of a sovereign nation imparts immunity from federal, state and local authorities. They use this perceived immunity to justify refusing to pay taxes, buy auto insurance, register their vehicles and defraud banks and other lending institutions. Many Moorish sovereigns also profit by selling bogus registration, licensing and insurance documents on websites promoting Moorish sovereign beliefs and doctrines.

These groups’ primary activities include the teaching of training seminars and videotaped classes that instruct participants on how to carry out financial fraud common to sovereign groups.

They also save money by practicing tax avoidance schemes or tax fraud. They have perpetrated large-scale financial fraud, including creating false money orders, fraudulent cashier’s checks and bogus financial instruments. In some cases, their fraudulent activity is part of a larger sovereign practice called the “redemption doctrine.” It declares that Moors (like all sovereigns) can incorporate themselves, thereby allowing individuals to use themselves as personal assets worth tens of millions of dollars.

Georgia State Law or Moorish and Martian Law

This quote is from the article Judge Ignores ‘Martian law,’ Tosses ‘Sovereign Citizen’ Into Slammer.

This Georgia judge had heard just about enough nonsense from a “sovereign citizen” charged in a scheme to steal a house.

Rockdale County Superior Court Judge David Irwin repeatedly advised Akeem Kwame – a self-described “Moorish national” charged with mortgage fraud for falsely claiming ownership of a house in Conyers, Ga. – to get a lawyer or accept a public defender.

And Kwame repeatedly rejected that advice. It was time for trial.

“It’s a simple question,” Irwin told Kwame on Monday, according to the Rockdale News. “Are you ready for trial, yes or no? It’s a yes or no. After that you may explain.”

Sovereign citizens are not given to straight answers. They believe they are not subject to government or law enforcement authority, and typically rely on convoluted, often incomprehensible pseudo-legal gobbledygook to assert their immunity. Moorish nationals are sovereigns who claim to be members of an indigenous black tribe independent of U.S. jurisdiction.

This Georgia judge had heard just about enough nonsense from a “sovereign citizen” charged in a scheme to steal a house.

Rockdale County Superior Court Judge David Irwin repeatedly advised Akeem Kwame – a self-described “Moorish national” charged with mortgage fraud for falsely claiming ownership of a house in Conyers, Ga. – to get a lawyer or accept a public defender.

And Kwame repeatedly rejected that advice. It was time for trial.

“It’s a simple question,” Irwin told Kwame on Monday, according to the Rockdale News. “Are you ready for trial, yes or no? It’s a yes or no. After that you may explain.”

Sovereign citizens are not given to straight answers. They believe they are not subject to government or law enforcement authority, and typically rely on convoluted, often incomprehensible pseudo-legal gobbledygook to assert their immunity. Moorish nationals are sovereigns who claim to be members of an indigenous black tribe independent of U.S. jurisdiction.

“Judge, I conditionally accept your offer to continue this once I am presented with the documentation so I can inspect any accusatory original instruments for my inspection,” replied Kwame, 48, also known as Gregory Ross of Covington, Ga.

This Georgia judge had heard just about enough nonsense from a “sovereign citizen” charged in a scheme to steal a house.

Rockdale County Superior Court Judge David Irwin repeatedly advised Akeem Kwame – a self-described “Moorish national” charged with mortgage fraud for falsely claiming ownership of a house in Conyers, Ga. – to get a lawyer or accept a public defender.

And Kwame repeatedly rejected that advice. It was time for trial.

“It’s a simple question,” Irwin told Kwame on Monday, according to the Rockdale News. “Are you ready for trial, yes or no? It’s a yes or no. After that you may explain.”

Sovereign citizens are not given to straight answers. They believe they are not subject to government or law enforcement authority, and typically rely on convoluted, often incomprehensible pseudo-legal gobbledygook to assert their immunity. Moorish nationals are sovereigns who claim to be members of an indigenous black tribe independent of U.S. jurisdiction.

“Judge, I conditionally accept your offer to continue this once I am presented with the documentation so I can inspect any accusatory original instruments for my inspection,” replied Kwame, 48, also known as Gregory Ross of Covington, Ga.

Conclusion

This is yet another example of the problems that blacks have with attention to detail and being able to read and understand history — along with their strong tendency to believe whatever they want to believe. This is why I propose that the total contribution to intellectual property by blacks is negative. That is, while there is some positive contribution, the negative intellectual property contribution (that is, the assertion of falsehoods) is far more significant than any positive contribution.